Our pick of this week’s art events: 23 – 28 May
Our pick of this week’s art events: 23 – 28 May
RA Recommends
By Sam Phillips
Published 22 May 2015
From international photography event Photo London to a Magna Carta tapestry by Cornelia Parker RA, we guide you through the week’s top art events.
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Photo London
Somerset House, London, until 24 May 2015
The capital’s photography enthusiasts have a new site for pilgrimage: Photo London, the first edition of an annual fair dedicated to the medium, presenting over 70 top-notch photography galleries from around the world. A fair of the same name (the hyphenated Photo-London) was staged for a few years in the early Noughties, but didn’t last the distance. This new incarnation, from different organisers, seems to have the quality and mix of exhibitors just right, allowing visitors to encounter in Somerset House’s elegant rooms everything from vintage 19th-century salt prints by Gustav Le Gray to mid-century masters like Diane Arbus (below) and contemporary stars such as Candida Höfer.
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Lee Miller and Picasso
Scottish National Portrait Gallery, Edinburgh, 23 May – 6 September 2015
Photography and art’s intersection found form in the relationship between Lee Miller and Picasso, the subject of a new show at the Scottish National Portrait Gallery. Great friends, they produced many portraits of each other, and the show features over 100 images by the American photographer as well as the painter’s wonderful Portrait of Lee Miller as l’Arlesienne (1937, below). Miller was known for her adventurousness as a war reporter, but in many of the images she shows an eye for the everyday human encounter, picturing Picasso as relaxed and humane character rather than the protean monster of legend.
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Cornelia Parker: Magna Carta (An Embroidery)
British Library, London, until 24 July 2015
Cornelia Parker has the midas touch, or the skill of the alchemist, combining ideas and mediums to create works of conceptual gold. The Academician’s latest commission is a 13-metre-long tapestry that has been unveiled in the British Library to mark the 800th anniversary of Magna Carta this year. In a nod to the new possibilities for democracy that the digital era affords, she has embroidered a representation of the Wikipedia page that discusses the famous charter. The process has also been apt: she asked to embroider sections over 200 individuals, ranging from prisoners and lawyers to writers and celebrities, all of whom have a connection to the law and human rights.
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Pre-pop to Post-human: Collage in the Digital Age
The Crescent, Scarborough, 23 May – 12 June 2015
The internet is also the subject of an interesting group show of contemporary art touring the country, its latest stop being Scarborough. The show uses as inspiration Eduardo Paolozzi RA’s series ‘Bunk’, a famous array of post-war Pop Art collages that brought together high and low culture images in unlikely combinations; the artists, who include RA Schools alumnus Adham Faramawy (below), mix and match images and ideas in myriad ways to connect to the character of our current digital era.
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Corin Sworn: Max Mara Art Prize for Women
Whitechapel Gallery, London, until 19 July 2015
Five years ago the Whitechapel in the East End of London launched a biannual art prize dedicated to women artists; Laure Prouvost, the last winner, went on to win the Turner Prize, partly thanks to the installation she made at the Whitechapel first. Corin Sworn is the latest recipient, and her exhibition to coincide with the award draws on the rich tradition of the Commedia dell’arte, the eccentric dramas performed by 16th-century troups of Italian actors. Painters including Watteau once reimagined these actors in paint, but here Sworn uses costumes, props, stage furniture and videos to stage a strange theatrical tableau.
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Sam Phillips (@SamP_London) is Editor of RAMagazine.